Explore the Family Name Joyner
The meaning of Joyner
English: occupational name for a maker of wooden furniture, from Middle English join(o)ur, Anglo-Norman French joignour, from joinre ‘to join, to connect’, Latin iungere. This surname is also very common among African Americans. Compare Joiner.
Dictionary of American Family Names, 2nd edition, © Oxford University Press, 2022.
How common is the last name Joyner in the United States?
Based on the Decennial U.S. Census, the popularity of the surname Joyner has seen a slight decrease in its ranking between 2000 and 2010, moving from 1134 to 1177. Despite this drop in rank, the actual number of people with the Joyner surname has increased by 5.91%, growing from 28,216 to 29,884 individuals. Similarly, the proportion per 100,000 people decreased marginally from 10.46 to 10.13 during the same period.
2000 | 2010 | Change | |
---|---|---|---|
Rank | #1,134 | #1,177 | -3.79% |
Count | 28,216 | 29,884 | 5.91% |
Proportion per 100k | 10.46 | 10.13 | -3.15% |
Race and Ethnicity of people with the last name Joyner
The ethnicity distribution of the Joyner surname has also seen some shifts, according to the Decennial U.S. Census. The largest growth has been amongst those identifying as Hispanic, with an increase of 61.48% over the ten-year span. Those identifying as having two or more ethnic identities have also increased significantly, by 48.72%. However, the majority of people with the surname Joyner still identify as White or Black, although the percentage of those identifying as White decreased slightly from 55.61% to 53.31%. The proportion of individuals identifying as Black remained relatively stable, increasing marginally from 41.05% to 41.66%.
2000 | 2010 | Change | |
---|---|---|---|
White | 55.61% | 53.31% | -4.14% |
Black | 41.05% | 41.66% | 1.49% |
Two or More Races | 1.56% | 2.32% | 48.72% |
Hispanic | 1.22% | 1.97% | 61.48% |
Asian/Pacific Islander | 0.27% | 0.37% | 37.04% |
American Indian and Alaskan Native | 0.29% | 0.36% | 24.14% |
Joyner ancestry composition
23andMe computes an ancestry breakdown for each customer. People may have ancestry from just one population or they may have ancestry from several populations. The most commonly-observed ancestry found in people with the surname Joyner is British & Irish, which comprises 56.3% of all ancestry found in people with the surname. The next two most common ancestries are French & German (17.7%) and Nigerian (6.9%). Additional ancestries include Ghanaian, Liberian & Sierra Leonean, Angolan & Congolese, Spanish & Portuguese, Scandinavian, and Eastern European.
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ANCESTRY BREAKDOWN | COMPOSITION |
---|---|
British & Irish | 56.3% |
French & German | 17.7% |
Nigerian | 6.9% |
Other | 19.1% |
Possible origins of the surname Joyner
Your DNA provides clues about where your recent ancestors may have lived. Having many distant relatives in the same location suggests that you may all share common ancestry there. Locations with many distant relatives can also be places where people have migrated recently, such as large cities. If a large number of individuals who share your surname have distant relatives in a specific area, it could indicate a connection between your surname and that location, stemming from either recent ancestral ties or migration.
Based on 23andMe data, people with last name Joyner have recent ancestry locations all within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
RECENT ANCESTRY Location | Percentage |
---|---|
Merseyside, United Kingdom | 77.20% |
Greater Manchester, United Kingdom | 77.20% |
Greater London, United Kingdom | 77.20% |
Glasgow City, United Kingdom | 76.80% |
West Midlands, United Kingdom | 76.60% |
What Joyner haplogroups can tell you
Haplogroups are genetic population groups that share a common ancestor on either your paternal or maternal line. These paternal and maternal haplogroups shed light on your genetic ancestry and help tell the story of your family.
The top paternal haplogroup of people with the surname Joyner is I-Z58, which is predominantly found among people with European ancestry. Haplogroup I-Z58 is descended from haplogroup I-M170. Other common haplogroups include R-U152 and I-M253, which are predominantly found among people with European and European ancestry. Other surnames with similar common haplogroups are: Lockwood, Dunlap, Case, Power, Workman, Hensley, Holcomb, Burleson, Holcombe, Sheffield.
The most common maternal haplogroups of people with Joyner surname are: H1, T2b, H. These most commonly trace back to individuals of European ancestry.
Your paternal lineage may be linked to Alexander Hamilton
Early in the morning on July 11, 1804, Aaron Burr (then Vice President of the United States) and Alexander Hamilton (founder of the U.S. Treasury) dueled on the New Jersey side of the Hudson River. This marked the culmination of a bitter personal and political rivalry between the two men. Alexander Hamilton died as a result of the duel, but his intellectual legacy survives in the founding documents of the nation he helped build. A piece of his genetic legacy survives as well: in the 21st century, genealogists documented the paternal haplogroups of dozens of Hamilton's living descendants and concluded that the Founding Father's paternal haplogroup was a branch of I-DF29.
Your maternal lineage may be linked to Marie Antoinette
Because it is so dominant in the general European population, haplogroup H also appears quite frequently in the continent's royal houses. Marie Antoinette, an Austrian Hapsburg who married into the French royal family, inherited the haplogroup from her maternal ancestors. So did Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, whose recorded genealogy traces his female line to Bavaria. Scientists also discovered that famed 16th century astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus traced his maternal lineages to haplogroup H.
What do people with the surname Joyner have in common?
Spoiler alert: it's complicated. People with the same last name are usually no more genetically similar than a randomly sampled group of people from the same population. That said, people with the same surname are more likely to have similar ancestries than randomly sampled individuals. The reason is the tendency of people with similar cultural or geographical backgrounds to preferentially mate with one another. That's why people who share a surname may be more likely to share traits and tendencies in common than people within the general population. Check out the percentages below to see the prevalences of tastes, habits, and traits of people with your surname compared with prevalences among 23andMe users.
Preferences
Traits
Habits
Wellness
Are health conditions linked to the last name Joyner?
The short answer is that, if there is an association between surname and health, it's usually more about your ancestry than your name. Individuals with a given surname are no more genetically similar than the general population but often have similar ancestries. The populations of people associated with those shared ancestries often have sets of genetic variations, also known as alleles, in common. Some of those alleles are associated with a greater likelihood of developing certain diseases.
Disease variant frequency by ancestry
Disease allele frequencies in populations associated with the surname Joyner are shown below. Important Note: not everyone with a disease allele will develop these health condition